Battle of the Pass of Brander

In August 1308 Sir
James Douglas met up with the king for a joint attack on the
Macdougalls of Lorn, kinsmen of the Comyns, the climax to Bruce's
campaign in the north. Two years before the Macdougalls had intercepted
and mauled the royal army at the Battle of Dalry.

But Alexander Macdougall was too old and sick to take part in the
fighting and lay in his castle at Dunstaffnage. So, John Bacach led the
MacDougall's and they set a trap for Bruce on the hill above the narrow
pass where they awaited the arrival of their opponents in the narrow
Pass of Brander, between Ben Cruachan and Loch Awe in Argyllshire.

Alexander Macdougall, too old and sick to take part in the fighting, lay
in his castle at Dunstaffnage. John Bacach was left with the task of
dealing with the expected onslaught. In the summer of 1308, possibly
late August, his army took up position in the narrow Pass of Brander,
where the River Awe slices through the southern slope of Ben Cruachan on
its way down from Loch Awe. However, only Barbour's poem "The Brus"
(late 14th century) places the battle; it does not mention the pass by
name but the description fits. The large number of cairns around Bridge
of Awe may give some support to the location.

John, who was recovering from an illness, observed his dispositions from
a galley on Loch Awe. His men were hidden in the hillside, overlooking
the narrow path through the pass. If they looked for a repetition of the
Battle of Dalrigh they were to be disappointed, for Bruce had now
learned enough of guerrilla warfare to sidestep so simple a trap. A
party of loyal Highlanders, commanded by Sir James Douglas, climbed even
higher up Ben Cruachan and – completely unobserved – positioned
themselves in the enemy's rear. As the Macdougalls attacked they were
caught in a vice, with King Robert coming from below and the Black
Douglas from above. The men of Argyll wavered and then broke. They were
chased westwards across the River Awe all the way back to Dunstaffnage,
while John escaped down the Loch in his galley, eventually taking refuge
in England, like the earl of Buchan. The Lord of Argyll surrendered and
did homage to Robert Bruce, but the following year he joined his son in
exile, dying in 1310 in the service of Edward II.

Returning south soon after, Douglas joined with Edward Bruce, the king's
brother, in a successful assault on the castle of Rutherglen near
Glasgow, going on to a further campaign in Galloway

The campaign of 1307 and 1308 ended the internal threat to the Scottish
king. All of his Comyn enemies had been destroyed or exiled and their
lands lost. The survivors no longer had a power base in Scotland, and
were only able to continue the fight as volunteers in the English army.
Nevertheless, a legacy of bitterness remained, eventually to return to
Scotland in 1332, under immeasurably different circumstances.

An effigy, commemorating Robert the Bruce and the battle, is in
St Conan's Kirk.